Keeping web gems has become a tough task for colleges

ERIC SONDHEIMER

For college baseball coaches such as John Savage of UCLA and Chad Kreuter of USC, recruiting high school baseball players has become as challenging as putting together a 5,000-piece jigsaw puzzle.

For college baseball coaches such as John Savage of UCLA and Chad Kreuter of USC, recruiting high school baseball players has become as challenging as putting together a 5,000-piece jigsaw puzzle.

They're looking to build a team but might get stuck with missing pieces because of the vast sums of money being offered high school players by professional teams.

"It's difficult for all the schools," Savage said. "You could get wiped out in a matter of weeks."

Recruiting top players is a balancing act: You want to offer scholarships to good players, but not too good.

Last year, all 17 high school players selected in the first round of baseball's June amateur draft signed professional contracts.

USC lost out on infielder Mike Moustakas, a Chatsworth High graduate who was taken No. 2 overall by the Kansas City Royals and received a $4-million signing bonus. The Trojans also lost outfielder Mike Stanton, a Sherman Oaks Notre Dame graduate who was chosen in the second round by the Florida Marlins.

UCLA had recruits taken in the first and second rounds who never spent a day on campus. Cal State Fullerton lost Chatsworth's Matt Dominguez, a first-round pick who signed with the Marlins.

"When you get them to commit, they don't look to be a first- or second-round player," Kreuter said. "Stanton looked like he was going to be a fifth-rounder. Moustakas looked to be a low first-round to second-round guy, and from talking to the family, if the money wasn't right. . . . Then he's the second pick. Who can forecast that? It went down to the last 15 minutes. He almost ended up here."

It has become clear that college programs have little chance of having a high school recruit show up if he becomes a first-round draft pick because the money has become too lucrative and scouts seem to be doing a better job communicating with prospects and judging who's willing to sign.

That makes USC's Robert Stock the rarest of recruits. No one can doubt the sincerity of Stock's heart-felt decision in the summer of 2006 to skip his senior year at Agoura to enroll early at USC and start playing college baseball as a 17-year-old catcher.

If he had stayed at Agoura, making him eligible for the 2007 amateur draft, he likely would have been a top-10 selection, perhaps equal to his friend, Moustakas.

"On the draft day, I was definitely watching and rooting for my buddy Mike," Stock said. "I was happy for him, but it was out of my mind whether or not I could have been there."


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